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Difference between revisions of "Eshin school"

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'''Eshin school'''
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'''[[Eshin school]]'''
[恵心流] ( Jpn Eshin-ryu)
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[[恵心流]] ( Jpn [[Eshin-ryu]])
  
     A branch of the Japanese Tendai school that regards Genshin (942-1017) as its founder. A disciple of Ryogen, the eighteenth chief priest of the Tendai school, Genshin was also called the Supervisor of Priests Eshin because he lived in a hall called Eshin-in at Enryaku-ji temple on Mount Hiei. Kakuun, another disciple of Ryogen, is regarded as the founder of the Danna school. Genshin valued the practice of meditation that Dengyo, founder of the Japanese Tendai school, had learned from Tao-sui, while Kakuun attached greater importance to the doctrinal studies that Dengyo had learned from Hsing-man. The Eshin school later gave rise to the Sugiu, Gyosen-bo, Tsuchimikado Monzeki, and Hoji-boschools.
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     A branch of the [[Japanese]] [[Tendai school]] that regards [[Genshin]] (942-1017) as its founder. A [[disciple]] of [[Ryogen]], the eighteenth [[chief priest]] of the [[Tendai school]], [[Genshin]] was also called the [[Supervisor of Priests]] [[Eshin]] because he lived in a hall called [[Eshin-in]] at [[Enryaku-ji]] [[temple]] on [[Mount Hiei]]. [[Kakuun]], another [[disciple]] of [[Ryogen]], is regarded as the founder of the [[Danna school]]. [[Genshin]] valued the practice of [[meditation]] that [[Dengyo]], founder of the [[Japanese]] [[Tendai school]], had learned from [[Tao-sui]], while [[Kakuun]] [[attached]] greater importance to the [[doctrinal]] studies that [[Dengyo]] had learned from [[Hsing-man]]. The [[Eshin school]] later gave rise to the [[Sugiu]], [[Gyosen-bo]], [[Tsuchimikado Monzeki]], and [[Hoji-bo]] schools.
 
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Latest revision as of 18:41, 16 April 2014

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Eshin school
恵心流 ( Jpn Eshin-ryu)

    A branch of the Japanese Tendai school that regards Genshin (942-1017) as its founder. A disciple of Ryogen, the eighteenth chief priest of the Tendai school, Genshin was also called the Supervisor of Priests Eshin because he lived in a hall called Eshin-in at Enryaku-ji temple on Mount Hiei. Kakuun, another disciple of Ryogen, is regarded as the founder of the Danna school. Genshin valued the practice of meditation that Dengyo, founder of the Japanese Tendai school, had learned from Tao-sui, while Kakuun attached greater importance to the doctrinal studies that Dengyo had learned from Hsing-man. The Eshin school later gave rise to the Sugiu, Gyosen-bo, Tsuchimikado Monzeki, and Hoji-bo schools.

Source

www.sgilibrary.org